Viagra's Enzyme Action May Give Pfizer Schizophrenia Advance
(September 21, 2006) --
Viagra has improved sex for millions of men and has
generated $12 billion in sales for Pfizer Inc. Now the erection pill is
providing the world's biggest drugmaker clues to a new way to fight
schizophrenia.
Researchers at Pfizer are using insights into Viagra to design
experimental drugs that may improve on
Zyprexa, the best- selling
schizophrenia remedy from Eli Lilly & Co., with $4.2 billion in sales last
year. Viagra causes an erection by turning off an enzyme in the body.
Blocking similar chemicals in the brain may silence the
hallucinations
typical of schizophrenia, the researchers say.
A better schizophrenia drug would be a boon for New York- based Pfizer
and the 2.5 million Americans who suffer the debilitating mental disorder.
Pfizer's current schizophrenia medicine,
Geodon, had only 4 percent of the
$15 billion spent worldwide in 2005 for anti-psychotic drugs. Researchers
say the new Viagra-like compounds will be developed only if shown in human
tests to be safer and more effective than existing drugs.
``We believe this drug is going to be different,'' says Frank Menniti, a
scientist at Pfizer's Groton, Connecticut, labs. ``Our job isn't just to
make
another anti-psychotic. We need to make
a better anti-psychotic than
what is out there.''
Starting in 1998, company researchers began probing the role that a
family of enzymes called phosphodiesterases play in the human body, says
Martin Jefson, a Pfizer scientist. Viagra works by inhibiting one of the
enzymes in the group. The scientists figured drugs similar to Viagra that
block other forms of the enzyme might be useful in other diseases, according
to Jefson.
Mapping Enzymes
Within a year and a half, the Pfizer team had mapped the location in the
body of all the enzymes, including one in the brain linked to mental
illnesses such as schizophrenia and
obsessive-compulsive disorder, Menniti
says.
In late 1999, a research team at Pfizer's Sandwich, England, labs began
making gallons of the schizophrenia-related enzyme from insect cells. With
plenty of the enzyme on hand, the scientists tested thousands of chemical
compounds during the next four years to see whether any blocked the enzyme's
activity in test-tube experiments, says Menniti.
Chemists then adjusted the structure of compounds that showed some action
against the enzyme to make a molecule most likely to be safe and effective
in humans, Jefson says. By 2003, after researchers had synthesized a batch
of chemicals that impeded the brain enzyme, they began testing the
compounds' effects in lab animals, he says.
Human trials are probably years away, and there is no certainty that the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration will be able to measure the mood
enhancements that Pfizer envisions. The agency may not be able to approve
drug for that benefit.
Hearing Voices
Schizophrenia, which usually strikes people in their teens to late 20s,
causes victims to hear voices, feel frightened and hallucinate, all of which
makes leading a normal life impossible, doctors say. As many as one in 100
people in the U.S. may be victims of the disease, according to the National
Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland.
The most popular drugs, such as Zyprexa, from Indianapolis- based Lilly,
and
Risperdal from New Brunswick, New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson, and
three other similar drugs including Pfizer's Geodon, allow many with the
disease to live symptom- free. Still, some patients don't regularly take
their pills, and about 74 percent stop treatment after 18 months, according
to a 2005 study in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Continue page 2
Last updated: 09/06
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